PLYMOUTH UNIVERSITY FINANCIAL SUPPORT FUND
CONDITIONS & CRITERIA
2016/17 Entry
Please ensure you read these guidance notes before making an application.
- STANDARD AWARDS
The MAXIMUM AWARD that may be allocated for the 2016-17 academic year:
Priority Groups – 80% of your calculated ‘Additional need’ up to a maximum of £2800.00
Non Priority Groups – 60%of your calculated ‘Additional need’ up to a maximum of £2100.00
- NON STANDARD AWARDS
Please note that you will not qualify for a Non Standard Award simply because you have run out of money but only if you are in an unforeseen or crisis situation.
What is the purpose of the Financial Support Fund?
Specifically, the Fund will be used to:
- Assist those who need financial help to meet particular costs, which are not already being met from statutory or other sources of funding
- Alleviate cases of severe financial hardship
- Meet unexpected financial crises
- Intervene in cases where the level of hardship is enough to prejudice the student’s continuance on the course.
What are the criteria for the Fund?
You will fall within the remit of the Financial Support Fund if
- you are a full/part-time undergraduate home student taking out the full statutory funding package of available funds
- you are NHS Funded
- you are postgraduate taking out the full statutory funding package of available funds
There is no upper age limit for applying to this Fund.
Who is excluded from the Financial Support Fund?
International and EU students are not usually eligible unless receiving UK government funding for living costs. Also students from the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man are ineligible because a different system of funding operates there.
EU students in receipt of fee support only should contact in the first instance as there is an alternative form to complete.
General conditions for all applicants to Financial Support Fund
Residency
You need to fulfil the residency criteria for receiving the UK statutory student support package. Your nationality or citizenship is not relevant.
Please note that the above conditions must be satisfied at the start of the course, students cannot become eligible if the qualifying period is up or if indefinite leave to remain is granted during the course.
Sources of Other Funding
You need to have applied for all other assistance to which you are entitled before an award from one of the Fundscan beconsidered (if you are unsure about your entitlements, please ask the Student Funding Unit for advice).
It is not an option to apply to the Fund for help in order to avoid taking out a Student Loan, either for maintenance or tuition fees. You must also apply for FINANCIALLY ASSESSED student support, i.e. you have been meanstested on household income even if you know you are above the earning threshold to receive support. If you are found to be above the threshold for receiving this, you can still apply to the Funds, provided that any required parental contribution is being made. We are unable to provide assistanceto make up for any contribution your parents should be providing.
If you are in a category where benefits may be payable, you (or your partner, if applicable) should have claimed as appropriate. Before applying to this Fund please contact (UPSU) Welfare for a benefits check
Attendance and Effort
To be considered for an award, you must be enrolled on your course and actively attending, unless you are on placement or intercalating, in which case special conditions may apply. Assistance does not depend on academic merit; however, you should be committed to your studies. It may be necessary to confirm this with relevant academic staff.
Documents
All documents submitted must be photocopies and handed in with the application form otherwise your application may be significantly delayed. Please do not submit original documents.
The onus is on you, the student, to supply copies of all relevant documents to support your application.
The following list provides examples of acceptable documentation:
For ALL Students:
- Full bank statementsfor each account held foryourself, and partner, if applicable. These need to be the most current statement, showing the previous 3 months’ transactions.
- Evidence of accommodation costs: Tenancy agreement, rent book, mortgage statement. Please be aware thatrent will not be considered if you are living in the parental home as a composite living cost figure is applied to cover food and bills.
For FULL TIME Undergraduates:
- Student Finance Breakdownshowing you have been meanstested
- NHS Bursary Notificationif NHS funded
- If NHS funded, evidence of non means tested student maintenance loan
For PART-TIME Undergraduates:
- Student Finance lettershowing fee and course grant or tuition fee loan
- Proof of your income/ i.e. 3 month’s wage slips
For POSTGRADUATES:
- Evidence of Postgraduate loan
- Professional/Career & Professional Career Development Loan(if applicable)
- Evidence of any scholarships such as the Postgraduate Scholarship
- Proof of all other income/sponsorship
(Postgraduates must be able to demonstrate that they have made financial provision for their studies)
For all applicants
If applicable, evidence of:
- Social Work Bursary
- Partners’ income (3 recent payslips)
- Benefits/Tax Credits- assessment letter. In the case of means tested benefits like Income Support, you must provide the letter showing the calculation. To ensure you are in receipt of all the benefits that you are entitled to we would recommend you speak to the UPSU Advice Centre
- Travel Costs:Train tickets, bus tickets, petrol receipts, parking receipts. Please note: travel costs can only be taken into account if you do not live within walking distance of the university, unless there is a reason why you are unable to walk e.g. a disability. If linked to placement, please evidence the actual placement and number of weeks involved.
- Course-Related Childcare Costs:Receipt or letter from nursery, OFSTED registered childcare provider, Before/After School Club.
- Disability costs not met by DSA
- Child Maintenance Payments: either payment made to you from CSA or other source, or payment you have to make in respect of a child who does not live with you, in which case you should also provide a copy of the child’s birth certificate.
- Compulsory Field Trip coststhat you must contribute to: letter from tutor or faculty stating costs involved. Please note: we can only take into account compulsory costs.
- Council Tax
- IVAs[Individual Voluntary Arrangements]: If you have entered into an IVA, we will need evidence of the monthly amount you are repaying, and will need to know what expenses were included in the IVA. The same applies to any other type of formal debt management arrangement.
- Non priority debts such as bank loans or credit cards cannotbe considered
- 3 month’s payslips for you and your partner (if applicable)
- Disabled Student Allowance (DSA) notification
- Medication costs for ongoing medication
- Car costs such as insurance and tax
- Evidence of rent arrears for current property
Copies of relevant documents will need to be retained on file for auditing purposes.
Peninsula College of Medicine and Dentistry
If you are a student of the Peninsula College of Medicine and Dentistry, you must be registered with Plymouth University, not Exeter in order to apply to.
The University and its Academic Partnerships
The University’s Academic Partnerships have their own allocations, so students should apply directly to the college they attend.
PLEASE NOTE: IF YOU DO NOT FULFIL THE BASIC ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA AS OUTLINED ABOVE, UNFORTUNATELY YOUR APPLICATION CANNOT BE ASSESSED AND YOU WILL RECEIVE A NOTIFICATION OF REFUSAL.
Confidentiality
All applications require detailed financial information and so are treated in the strictest confidence. The forms are handled only by staff in the Student Funding Unit, and will only be looked at in detail by senior administrators.
Why is so much information needed?
The application form requires a lot of detailed information about your finances because a ‘need’ must be established before an award is made, and also to avoid all applicants having to be interviewed. If a form is well completed, it will be possible to assess it quickly and if appropriate make a payment as soon as possible.
What type of help is available?
Applications will initially be assessed for a StandardAward (ongoing hardship). To be allocated a Standard Award, you must be able to demonstrate a shortfall of income, after a standard calculation has been applied.
If you are applying for assistance because your funding is delayed, it will be more appropriate to apply for a Short Term Loan in the first instance ( ). A subsequent application for a Standard Award can then be made once you have all the relevant information regarding your funding.
PLEASE NOTE THAT ALTHOUGH A STANDARD CALCULATION IS APPLIED IN ORDER TO ESTABLISH A SHORTFALL OF INCOME, THE PERCENTAGE OF THE SHORTFALL AWARDED IS DISCRETIONARY AND MAY FLUCTUATE DURING THE YEAR, DEPENDING ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS AND THE NUMBER OF APPLICANTS.
AWARDS ARE ALSO SUBJECT TO SATISFACTORY BUDGETING.
YOU WILL NOT QUALIFY FOR HELP IF YOU HAVE SIMPLY RUN OUT OF MONEY AT TIME OF APPLICATION.
WHEN CAN I APPLY?
The Fund will open on 3 October 2016 and will closeon 2 June 2017. Final year students should submit their application and all supporting evidence by 12 May 2017.
Please be aware that payments cannot be made until you have enrolled for the current academic year and you have received your first loan instalment if applicable.
Please note that you will only be able to make one application within each academic year.
When will I receive a decision?
We aim to assess applications for Standard Awards within 28 days, although this will not be possible if further information has to be sought, and there may be delays at particularly busy times in the academic year. Remember if you do not complete your form fully, or you do not attach the documents requested, delays will result or your application may be closed.
Completing the form
Application forms will be available to download from our web pages and can be handed into Student Funding, 4th Floor, Nancy Astor Building.Paper applications are also available from this point of contact.
Please note that students must sign their own forms. Applications made by parents, partners or other parties cannot be accepted.
STANDARD AWARDS
A Standard Award is based on your overall requirements for the academic year, and is intended to help cover any shortfall of income caused by being a student, not general hardship that might have existed prior to starting the course.
Assistance can be given where there is an additional need caused or increased by:
- Childcare costs not covered under other schemes
- Travel costs if you are outside walking distance of the university, if you are disabled or injured, of if you have placement costs that are not reimbursed
- Exceptionally high costs of course materials and equipment
- Severe ongoing hardship, where a significant shortfall of income can be demonstrated
- A change of circumstances putting you in severe ongoing hardship
- Extra costs due to a disability or special need, and cannot obtain help elsewhere
Assistance cannot be given for
- Tuition fees
- When parents do not pay their assessed contribution to the Student Loan
- Purchase of a car/ IT equipment
- Maintaining luxury items or paying private school fees
- You have run out of money
To qualify for an award, youneed to show that your outgoings exceed your income. If the budget planner on the application form shows your income as more than your outgoings, you will receive an immediate rejection. Please be aware that a shortfall demonstrated on your own budget planner will not necessarily result in an award and all awards are subject to satisfactory budgeting.
PRIORITY GROUPS for Standard Awards
Certain groups of students will be treated as priority;however please be aware that this does not mean that you will automatically receive an award; a shortfall of income will still need to be demonstrated in the calculation that is applied. These groups are:
- Students with dependent children
- Mature undergraduates, especially those with existing financial commitments
- Final year students who are in financial difficulty
- Disabled students
- Care Leavers
- Foyer Students who are homeless
- Students who have been awarded estranged status by SFE
- Young Carers
Even if you do not fit into one of these priority groups you can still apply, but you must demonstrate why you have a particular need.
NON STANDARD AWARDS (EMERGENCY AWARDS)
Non Standard Awards are generally emergency awards, and can be applied for at any time. It is possible to receive both a Standard and Non-Standard Award during the same academic year. Non Standard Awards can generally be made in the following circumstances:
- If you have unavoidable extra costs due to an unforeseen situation, which take up your normal income and leave you with no money to live on.
- If you suffer a disaster such as a burglary, fire or flood, where you lose essential items (it is stronglyrecommended that you are covered by insurance).
- If you have to move house for unavoidable reasons e.g. domestic violence.
- If you need travel costs related to bereavement, or to visit a sick relative, or in connection with your own medical treatment.
In all cases, supporting evidence will need to be provided.
Non-standard awards do not cover:
- Running out of money
- Replacement of non-essential items lost, stolen or destroyed.
- Replacement of lost money [other than small payments for living costs if this has left you completely without funds].
- Payment of utility bills.
- Payment of non-priority debts e.g. overdrafts and credit cards [you will be offered money advice instead].
- Payment of fines, including parking tickets.
- The cost of birthdays, Christmas or holidays.
- The cost of school trips and uniforms
- The result of poor budgeting and/or excessive spending [budgeting advice is available].
We will discuss your spending pattern to see where your money has been going. Emergency assistance cannot be considered if nothing exceptional has happened and you have simply run out of money.
HOW APPLICATIONS FOR STANDARD AWARDS ARE ASSESSED
Composite living cost
Your weekly income will be compared to your Composite Living Cost, and your variable expenditure.
The CLC consists of a basic amount for general living costs.
Working out your CLC
You can work out your own weekly composite living costs by using the following amounts:
Single student -£77
Couple with no children -£121
Couple with one child -£211
Lone parent with one child -£167
Add on £71for each additional - child
The composite living cost is based on benefit allowances and premiums. It is intended to cover normal living costs such as food and utility bills.
Variable expenditure
Other expenses are known as variable expenditure. This covers such items as your accommodation costs, a notional amount for your course costs, the actual amount per week of any childcare or travel, and the amount of any other special expenses, including payments to creditors where you cannot use the source of credit. Non priority debts* such as credits cards or bank loan repayments will not be considered.
*The Debt Advice Handbook advises: “Non-priority debts are those where non-payment will not result in the loss of the debtor’s home, liberty, essential goods or services” (9th edition, p 225).
Please note that accommodation costs that appear excessive may be capped accordingly.
Many students mention car costs as part of their variable expenditure. These costs, within reason, will be allowed where students have dependents or are travelling some distance to reach university. Students living within a short distance of the campus will not be allowed car costs, unless they have restricted mobility and this must be evidenced.
Your composite living costs and variable expenditure are added together and balanced against your annual income, divided over the appropriate number of weeks. An assumed income is added for single students and postgraduates.
Assumed Income
If you have no dependents, an assumed income will be applied. This is intended as an average amount a student might have available over the year from part time earnings/student overdraft.
The assumed income is £1850 per year, depending upon the amount of SFE support you receive, but only £617 in the final year of the course.
If you work during term time or over the vacations, this will not be counted in the calculation, only the assumed income. Therefore, even if you earn more than £1850 over the year, only the assumed income will be counted.